craigswan: Weigh one ton of feathers there.
Of course it will
You're loading the feathers on the moon scale, at a rate of 84 to 1
In other words, the gravity on the moon is 16% of Earths
It is so little that the astronauts walking up there, have a tough time knowing which way is up. While walking. They trip all over the place, and have a hard time getting up righted.
I also scuba dive. DEEP! In pitch black night dives, you have no sense of up, down, or sideways. When in sunken naval vessels retrieving items, many divers get disoriented due to the weightlessness.
Panic ensues, divers die. They never remember to purge their regulators, to see which way the bubbles go. Air bubbles always go up. You have better vision at night with a dive light in your hand, in many of the worlds oceans, that you do during the day.
It is so dark at night, you can place your hand directly on your mask, and NOT see the outline of your fingers. That's as dark as it gets.
The fluid in your ears touching tiny fibers, are the controllers to your brain, to let you know which way is upright while on the planet, along with your eyesight, to confirm the signals from the liquid in your ears.
This is why people get car sick and ocean sickness. They do not see movement, if reading a book in a car. The signal from the ears, are saying you're moving, but the signals from your eyes, tell your brain you are in fact not moving. Conflict, and sickness ensues.
Diving is weightlessness, when buoyancy compensation has been achieved. During the day one can see the bubbles when exhaling, At night, Nothing until you turn your light on.
Entering any type of ship, is the most dangerous undertaking, besides depth & time, while diving. Imagine going into a upside down ship where the walkways in the corridors are above your head. It is very easy to walk normally on the floors upside down with corrections in buoyancy, during daylight.
Now imagine darkness you have never witnessed before, and doing the same thing. You will become disoriented, and trying to leave the ship, you will walk the stairways upside down, until you reach the bilge room. Bottom of the hull, not the top, you thought you were heading towards.
This is where most inexperienced divers lose their lives. All they needed to do was purge the regulator, and they would have seen the bubbles going towards their feet, thus relocating their sense of direction. Time to walk on the ceiling to go up.
Astronauts are given this exact same training in pools to understand zero gravity, and low gravity effects on the brains balance tools we possess.
Weightless on the moon is as difficult in the ocean. Most rocks weigh less under water, as well.
craigswan: I'm an Engineer.
I'm living life
Edit: I did not see your post Paulton. You're a wicked, wicked man. A lot of horses gave their lives for that cause, eh?